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  1. View Julia Richman High School Yearbooks & Find Old Friends. Register for Free Today! Search Yearbooks | Plan Your Reunion | Connect With Alumni | Register Free At Classmates®

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  1. 8. Feb. 2005 · The building that was once a high school for thousands of adolescent girls is now home to six schools, serving students from prekindergarten through high school. Built in 1923, Julia Richman (named after the city's first woman district superintendent of schools) was a thriving all-girls high school for fifty years.

  2. Julia Richman High School 317 East 67Th Street New York , NY 10021 Administration Harris Marmor Acting Principal 212-879-6866 School District: Manhattan High School District Office

  3. Eileen Walkerrogan 1943-1947. Juanita Wallace 1967-1971. Nona Washington 1972-1976. Carole Weisz 1959-1963. Diane Wright 1972-1976. Rodriguez Yolanda 1978-1982. Y Yvonne watson 1958-1962. Reconnect with friends from Julia Richman High School, find reunions, view yearbook photos and more.

  4. Juanita Wallace 1967-1971. Carole Walsh 1964-1968. Nona Washington 1972-1976. Carole Weisz 1959-1963. Diane Wright 1972-1976. Rodriguez Yolanda 1978-1982. Y Yvonne watson 1958-1962. Reconnect with friends from Julia Richman High School, find reunions, view yearbook photos and more.

  5. PSAL Sports. The Julia Richman Education Complex fields 6 varsity level teams within the Public School Athletic League -- boys and girls teams in Soccer, Volleyball and Basketball. Students from the 4 high schools in the complex are eligible to play, and each year many Urban Academy students play on the JREC teams. Click here for more information.

  6. Grades. 9–12. Enrollment. 146. Website. www .urbanacademy .org. The Urban Academy Laboratory High School (also known as the Urban Academy) is a small, progressive, transfer public high school located on the Upper East Side of New York City. Founded in 1986, its goal was to create a place where students could learn in a nontraditional sense.

  7. To reverse this downward spiral, the New York City Board of Education chose Julia Richman as one of the first high schools to be reorganized into smaller units. The $2.5 Million project took two years (1994–96) to complete, as provisions had to be made to graduate all students from the old Julia Richman High School before initiating a choice-based set of new schools.